Answer:
d. gadflies
Explanation:
In his famous letter from Birmingham City Jail, Martin Luther King Jr. wrote:
<em>“...we must see the need of having nonviolent </em><em>gadflies </em><em>to create the kind of tension in society that will help men rise from the dark depths of prejudice and racism to the majestic heights of understanding and brotherhood”</em>
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Gadfly is an established metaphor for the person that doesn’t take the status quo as such and tries to bring the change and the novelty into the society, usually by standing up to the authorities in the process.
Using the gadfly metaphor, King expresses the importance of standing up to the established rules of the society and<u> creating tension that has to end up in change</u>. The tension he calls for is <u>nonviolent and interference to the authority</u>, but impossible to ignore. <u>He is, therefore, calling for nonviolent civil disobedience that will challenge the racial prejudices, and finally abolish them.</u>
The coordinating conjunction among these is the word but.
However and although are subordinating conjunctions, not coordinating.
<span>On the train ride, Montag is trying to memorize Matthew 6:28, which instructs readers to forget about material possessions and to "consider the lilies of the field," beautiful blooms that grow wild on their own. His antagonist is an advertisement for Denham's dentifrice. The jingle in the ad is so abnoxious and incessant that it invades his thoughts and keeps him from being able to focus on anything meaningful.</span>
Answer:
theme
Explanation:
The other ones don't fit and theme fits that definition